Authors: Maggie Stuckey
Recipe from Jennifer Rollins,
SE Works
, Portland, Oregon
Serves 6
Jennifer says: This is one of my very favorites for those rainy Portland fall evenings. Add a loaf of crusty bread with sweet butter, friends, good conversation, a crisp white wine, and ideally a nice fire in the fireplace . . . and you can’t go wrong!
Variations:
One of the reasons for the popularity of butternut squash soup surely must be how graciously it accepts new ideas. Dennis Battles, of Long Beach, Washington, incorporates roasted pears in place of the more usual apples and always challenges his guests to name the secret ingredient (they never get it). And see Martha Bayne’s version on
page 140
.
Make ahead?
Steps 1 and 2, for sure; up through step 4 if you’ll be rushed on soup day.
For large crowds:
This soup is easy to multiply in the fall, when butternut squash are in such abundant supply.
I hate trying to cut a tough winter squash when it’s raw, so roasting it whole, with a few fork holes poked into it, is fair game as long as you don’t mind getting your hands dirty removing the seeds from the roasted squash. Otherwise, lightly grease a baking dish. Cut the squash in half lengthwise and scoop out and discard the seeds. Rub oil on the cut edge, and place the halves, skin-side up, in the prepared baking dish. Bake for 45 to 50 minutes, let the squash cool, and then scoop out the flesh.
— Jennifer Rollins
Recipe from Sonia Montalbano,
SE Works
, Portland, Oregon
Serves 6–8
Sonia says: My mother came up with the original recipe for this soup, and then I changed it a little (mostly the difference is in how you deal with the chicken, see notes below). When I entered this soup in the Soup Cookoff (
page 80
), I had a photo of my grandmother at her wedding on the table, because nice displays always attract attention and more money for the cause. “Nona” is what Italian children call their grandmothers, and I let people draw their own conclusions; if they thought it was my grandmother’s recipe, I was willing to let them! But what I didn’t explain to them is that
I
am Nona, because when my friends all had kids none of them could say “Sonia” and it came out as “Nona.”
Note:
There are two ways to prepare the chicken in this soup: the “easy” way and the “other” way. The easy way is just as flavorful, but you have to use more chicken bouillon to substitute for the flavor you get when you prepare the chicken the “other” way. They take about the same amount of time. The difference really lies in work and the cleanup.
Make ahead?
Cook the chicken, whichever way you prefer, one day ahead. Refrigerate.
For large crowds:
I suspect you could make this for an army, and it would still be delicious.
Portland, Oregon
If you are involved with any nonprofit organization, or know anyone who is, or if you simply care about your community, I’m sure you have attended fund-raisers built around a silent auction. And I’m also sure at some point you must have thought, “Isn’t there something else we could do?”
They took a typical boring event — a silent auction for charity — and turned it into something cozy and warm and welcoming. That’s the power of soup.
Turns out, there is. This small agency in Portland, a grassroots organization dedicated to job training and support services, has created an innovative event built around soup. Now in its twelfth year, the Soup Cookoff is both popular and effective: in 2011, they raised $85,000 to help the families of Southeast Portland.
The agency has one big fund-raiser a year, an event with multiple layers. There is a sit-down dinner, a silent auction, and a live auction. But the part that everyone seems to enjoy the most is the Soup Cookoff. Here’s how it works:
Local cooks (not professionals) are invited to enter their soup. They bring a large amount to the event, enough to serve tastings to several hundred people. The cooks are encouraged to prepare a description of their soup, and some put together an elaborate display.
As the guests arrive, they buy tickets for $1 each and vote for their favorite soup by dropping tickets into jars next to the soups they like best; if they run out of tickets, they just tuck in $1 bills. The money is part of the fund-raising, of course, but it’s also a way of determining the cookoff winners. At the end of this part of the evening (before the dinner) the jars are counted and the one with the most money is deemed the People’s Choice and earns the Golden Ladle award for its creator. In addition, local celebrities (chefs from local restaurants, elected officials, and community leaders) choose a second winner, and sometimes that recipe is featured in a local restaurant for a year.
The joy of it is the many conversations between tasters and cooks, and the all-in-fun competitive spirit. And in the end, the deep satisfaction of knowing that deserving people were helped.
“It was a small event at first,” executive director Holly Whittleton says, “just 30 to 40 people. In 2011, we had 350 guests, but the basic idea hasn’t changed. Community development is what we’re all about, and this was always intended to be a grassroots event with a strong community feel. Even though we’re much larger now, it still is friendly, warm, welcoming.
“Food and not-for-profits just seem to go together,” she adds with a smile. “But there’s something special about soup that fits with us. It creates a humble environment that just works. We don’t have a lot of money to rent space, so we put a focus on affordability, on highlighting our community, on having fun.”
Two recent cooks talked about their experiences — and shared their winning recipes.
Sonia Montalbano,
a volunteer board member, admires this organization because “we actually get things done. We help people learn English, help people go back to school, help people get jobs.” Speaking of the Soup Cookoff specifically, she says, “The first time I went, I was just blown away. It is such a clever idea. It’s a very festive atmosphere, with music and people milling around talking to the chefs and checking out the auction items. People are just intrigued at the idea of trying the soups. And the cooks go all out with their presentations. They are lined up on long tables, on one side of the room, with slow cookers or restaurant-style serving pans. They have a supply of small taster cups, and people gather around to ask about the soup and to taste it. I see all kinds of neat conversations between the tasters and the chefs.”
Jennifer Rollins
adds, “They took a typical boring event — a silent auction for charity — and turned it into something cozy and warm and welcoming. That’s the power of soup.”
Recipe from
Lisa Fine
, Montpelier, Vermont
Serves 6
Lisa says: Borscht tastes especially good if you make it one day and eat it the next; the soup thickens as it absorbs the flavors of the vegetables. We make plenty for leftovers to enjoy the next day.
Make ahead?
It’s even better if you do; see Lisa’s note above.
For large crowds:
With its inexpensive and outrageously healthy ingredients, this is an ideal soup to make in large quantities.